Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/29294
Title: Structural Health Monitoring Impact Classification Method Based on Bayesian Neural Network
Authors: Yu, H
Hami Seno, A
Sharif Khodaei, Z
Ferri Aliabadi, MH
Keywords: structural health monitoring;passive sensing;impact classification;Bayesian neural network;artificial neural network;uncertainty measurement
Issue Date: 21-Sep-2022
Publisher: MDPI
Citation: Yu, H. et al. (2022) 'Structural Health Monitoring Impact Classification Method Based on Bayesian Neural Network', Polymers, 14 (19), 3947, pp. 1 - 22. doi: 10.3390/polym14193947.
Abstract: This paper proposes a novel method for multi-class classification and uncertainty quantification of impact events on a flat composite plate with a structural health monitoring (SHM) system by using a Bayesian neural network (BNN). Most of the existing research in passive sensing has focused on deterministic approaches for impact detection and characterization. However, there are variability in impact location, angle and energy in real operational conditions which results in uncertainty in the diagnosis. Therefore, this paper proposes a reliability-based impact characterization method based on BNN for the first time. Impact data are acquired by a passive sensing system of piezoelectric (PZT) sensors. Features extracted from the sensor signals, such as their transferred energy, frequency at maximum amplitude and time interval of the largest peak, are used to develop a BNN for impact classification (i.e., energy level). To test the robustness and reliability of the proposed model to impact variability, it is trained with perpendicular impacts and tested by variable angle impacts. The same dataset is further applied in a method called multi-artificial neural network (multi-ANN) to compare its ability in uncertainty quantification and its computational efficiency against the BNN for validation of the developed meta-model. It is demonstrated that both the BNN and multi-ANN can measure the uncertainty and confidence of the diagnosis from the prediction results. Both have very high performance in classifying impact energies when the networks are trained and tested with perpendicular impacts of different energy and location, with 94% and 98% reliable predictions for BNN and multi-ANN, respectively. However, both metamodels struggled to detect new impact scenarios (angled impacts) when the data set was not used in the development stage and only used for testing. Including additional features improved the performance of the networks in regularization; however, not to the acceptable accuracy. The BNN significantly outperforms the multi-ANN in computational time and resources. For perpendicular impacts, both methods can reach a reliable accuracy, while for angled impacts, the accuracy decreases but the uncertainty provides additional information that can be further used to improve the classification.
URI: https://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/29294
DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/polym14193947
Other Identifiers: ORCiD: Aldyandra Hami Seno https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9945-5299
ORCiD: Zahra Sharif Khodaei https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5106-2197
ORCiD: M. H. Ferri Aliabadi https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2883-2461
3947
Appears in Collections:Brunel Composites Centre

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